483 research outputs found
Double quantum dots as a high sensitive submillimeter-wave detector
A single electron transistor (SET) consisting of parallel double quantum dots
fabricated in a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure crystal is
demonstrated to serve as an extremely high sensitive detector of submillimeter
waves (SMMW). One of the double dots is ionized by SMMW via Kohn-mode plasma
excitation, which affects the SET conductance through the other quantum dot
yielding the photoresponse. Noise equivalent power of the detector for
wavelengths about 0.6 mm is estimated to reach the order of
W/ at 70 mK.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, REVTeX, submitted to Appl.Phys.Let
Improvement of polyuria, bladder sensation and bladder capacity following renal transplantation
The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.com.ArticleInternational Journal of Urology. 13(5): 616-618 (2006)journal articl
Electronic Processes at the Breakdown of the Quantum Hall Effect
Microscopic processes giving the energy gain and loss of a two-dimensional
electron system in long-range potential fluctuations are studied theoretically
at the breakdown of the quantum Hall effect in the case of even-integer filling
factors. The Coulomb scattering within a broadened Landau level is proposed to
give the gain, while the phonon scattering to give the loss. The energy balance
equation shows that the electron temperature T_e and the diagonal conductivity
sigma_{xx} exhibit a bistability above the lower critical electric field
E_{c1}. Calculated values of E_{c1} as well as T_e and sigma_{xx} at E_{c1} are
in agreement with the observed values in their orders of magnitude.Comment: 4 pages, 2 Postscript figures, submitted to the Journal of the
Physical Society of Japa
Strong, Ultra-narrow Peaks of Longitudinal and Hall Resistances in the Regime of Breakdown of the Quantum Hall Effect
With unusually slow and high-resolution sweeps of magnetic field, strong,
ultra-narrow (width down to ) resistance peaks are observed in
the regime of breakdown of the quantum Hall effect. The peaks are dependent on
the directions and even the history of magnetic field sweeps, indicating the
involvement of a very slow physical process. Such a process and the sharp peaks
are, however, not predicted by existing theories. We also find a clear
connection between the resistance peaks and nuclear spin polarization.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures. To appear in PR
Narrow band imaging in [OIII] and Halpha to search for ICPNe in the Virgo cluster
We have identified intracluster planetary nebulae in a Virgo cluster core
field by imaging with the Subaru Suprime-Cam through two narrow band filters
centered at the redshifted wavelengths of the [OIII] \AA and the
H \AA lines; broad-band images in V and R were
acquired to check for emission in the adjacent continuum. Emission line objects
in Virgo are then selected from the two-color diagram ([OIII] -- Halpha) vs.
([OIII] -- (V+R)), which is calibrated using PNe in M84 (Jacoby et al. 1990).
Using both [OIII] and Halpha allows us to distinguish bona-fide planetary
nebulae from high redshift emission-line galaxies at the bright end of the
[OIII] luminosity function. Spectroscopic observations of a subsample of these
objects were made at the TNG and at the VLT, in a region around M84 and in an
intracluster field respectively. The observations confirm the efficiency of the
combined [OIII]+H imaging to identify true PNe. We also obtained the
first spectrum of an intracluster PN which shows the [OIII] doublet with S/N >
10 and its Halpha emission. From the results based on the spectroscopic
follow-up, we derive a lower limit to the fraction of the Virgo cluster light
contributed by the intracluster stars at the surveyed position in the cluster
core: it amounts to 10%.Comment: 32 pages,11 figures, in press on AJ, February 200
Electric-Field Breakdown of Absolute Negative Conductivity and Supersonic Streams in Two-Dimensional Electron Systems with Zero Resistance/Conductance States
We calculate the current-voltage characteristic of a two-dimensional electron
system (2DES) subjected to a magnetic field at strong electric fields. The
interaction of electrons with piezoelectric acoustic phonons is considered as a
major scattering mechanism governing the current-voltage characteristic. It is
shown that at a sufficiently strong electric field corresponding to the Hall
drift velocity exceeding the velocity of sound, the dissipative current
exhibits an overshoot. The overshoot of the dissipative current can result in a
breakdown of the absolute negative conductivity caused by microwave irradiation
and, therefore, substantially effect the formation of the domain structures
with the zero-resistance and zero-conductance states and supersonic electron
streams.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Transient current spectroscopy of a quantum dot in the Coulomb blockade regime
Transient current spectroscopy is proposed and demonstrated in order to
investigate the energy relaxation inside a quantum dot in the Coulomb blockade
regime. We employ a fast pulse signal to excite an AlGaAs/GaAs quantum dot to
an excited state, and analyze the non-equilibrium transient current as a
function of the pulse length. The amplitude and time-constant of the transient
current are sensitive to the ground and excited spin states. We find that the
spin relaxation time is longer than, at least, a few microsecond.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The Subaru COSMOS 20: Subaru Optical Imaging of the HST COSMOS Field with 20 Filters
We present both the observations and the data reduction procedures of the
Subaru COSMOS 20 project that is an optical imaging survey of the HST COSMOS
field, carried out by using Suprime-Cam on the Subaru Telescope with the
following 20 optical filters: 6 broad-band (B, g', V, r', i', and z'), 2
narrow-band (NB711 and NB816), and 12 intermediate-band filters (IA427, IA464,
IA484, IA505, IA527, IA574, IA624, IA679, IA709, IA738, IA767, and IA827). A
part of this project is described in Taniguchi et al. (2007) and Capak et al.
(2007) for the six broad-band and one narrow-band (NB816) filter data. In this
paper, we present details of the observations and data reduction for remaining
13 filters (the 12 IA filters and NB711). In particular, we describe the
accuracy of both photometry and astrometry in all the filter bands. We also
present optical properties of the Suprime-Cam IA filter system in Appendix.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables; accepted for publication in PASJ on
October 2, 201
Field-induced breakdown of the quantum Hall effect
A numerical analysis is made of the breakdown of the quantum Hall effect
caused by the Hall electric field in competition with disorder. It turns out
that in the regime of dense impurities, in particular, the number of localized
states decreases exponentially with the Hall field, with its dependence on the
magnetic and electric field summarized in a simple scaling law. The physical
picture underlying the scaling law is clarified. This intra-subband process,
the competition of the Hall field with disorder, leads to critical breakdown
fields of magnitude of a few hundred V/cm, consistent with observations, and
accounts for their magnetic-field dependence \propto B^{3/2} observed
experimentally. Some testable consequences of the scaling law are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, Revtex, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Targeted tandem affinity purification of PSD-95 recovers core postsynaptic complexes and schizophrenia susceptibility proteins
The molecular complexity of mammalian proteomes demands new methods for mapping the organization of multiprotein complexes. Here, we combine mouse genetics and proteomics to characterize synapse protein complexes and interaction networks. New tandem affinity purification (TAP) tags were fused to the carboxyl terminus of PSD-95 using gene targeting in mice. Homozygous mice showed no detectable abnormalities in PSD-95 expression, subcellular localization or synaptic electrophysiological function. Analysis of multiprotein complexes purified under native conditions by mass spectrometry defined known and new interactors: 118 proteins comprising crucial functional components of synapses, including glutamate receptors, K+ channels, scaffolding and signaling proteins, were recovered. Network clustering of protein interactions generated five connected clusters, with two clusters containing all the major ionotropic glutamate receptors and one cluster with voltage-dependent K+ channels. Annotation of clusters with human disease associations revealed that multiple disorders map to the network, with a significant correlation of schizophrenia within the glutamate receptor clusters. This targeted TAP tagging strategy is generally applicable to mammalian proteomics and systems biology approaches to disease
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